Tag Info

What you see on Google Play Store is total installs by users, the number of times an app has ever been downloaded. It's not necessarily an accurate count of how many people are actually using the app. Developers see a second number in their Developer Console alongside the total installs. That number is current installs by device. And chances are the two ...

To see your app's ratings & reviews:
Sign in to your Google Play Developer Console.
Select an app.
On the left menu, click Ratings & Reviews.
Near the top of the page under "Ratings & Reviews", you can see the total number of ratings, a summary of star ratings, and the average rating for your app.
You can also download monthly reports about ...

You should check your manifest file, I had some trouble with it because I asked some permissions which may only be available on a smartphone - and not tablet.
For example, if you want a phone user to be able to call from your app, you must include the permission below but put the required attribute to false because the user is able to use your app without ...

According to this:
http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2013/11/google-play-rolls-out-designed-for-phones-tag-of-shame-on-tablets/
"Apps that don't include certain tablet enhancements will display a "designed for phones" tag on the tablet version of the Play Store, making users with tablets less likely to install them."
I guess this is the reason why you get ...

Currently (July 2015), HTML escape sequences (&bull; &#8226;) do not work in browser version of Play Store, they're displayed as text. Though, Play Store app handles them with no problem.
So, if you're after the unicode bullet point in your app/update description [that's what's got you here, most likely], just copy-paste the bullet character
•
...